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Reddit mentions of Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience

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Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience. Here are the top ones.

Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience
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Found 3 comments on Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience:

u/soowonlee · 6 pointsr/askphilosophy

Some stuff that's important in contemporary analytic phil religion:

The Miracle of Theism by J.L. Mackie

God, Freedom, and Evil by Alvin Plantinga

God and Other Minds by Alvin Plantinga

The Coherence of Theism by Richard Swinburne

The Existence of God by Richard Swinburne

Can God Be Free? by William Rowe

Perceiving God by William Alston

u/S11008 · 3 pointsr/atheism

Well, it depends on what you want to study. If you want to go for religious experience, phenomenology, and epistemology, Yandell's "The Epistemology of Religious Experience", Otto's "The Idea of the Holy", James' "Varieties ...", and Alston's "Perceiving God" would be good.

For Medieval philosophy you really can't beat Aquinas. Since the SCG and ST are pretty hefty, it'd be good to start with Aristotle's metaphysica and physica (late late late edit: not just that, but read his works on souls as well as his other works). McKeon's "The Basic works of Aristotle" is an okay translation. There's a better one, but the name eludes me. After that, Aquinas' "On Being and Essence" is a must-read for metaphysics. Then either flip through the SCG or ST, or even better, find a companion for the two works (Peter Kreeft, Feser, and Sir A. Kenny are all decent). Beyond Aquinas, and a bit earlier than him, are Augustine and the Church fathers. I can't really say much on them because I'm not too familiar-- I fell in love with the Medieval philosopher-theologians before I converted, I didn't really pay much mind to those earlier than them in the Christian tradition. However, Augustine is usually the man I've heard recommended.

Beyond the books, philosophy papers between, say, Bergmann, Pruss, Almeida, et al. are wonderful. Almeida's "On Vague Eschatology", "A New Cosmological Argument Undone" (in response to Pruss), Almeida's refutation of Rowe's new evidentialist argument from evil, and his reply to Alston's skeptical theist response to Rowe's new evidentialist argument. Usually these will be followed by a response, and counter-response, etc.

For Oderberg, and in general for the Neo-Aristotelians, Tahko's collection of essays by varying neo-Aristotelians in "Contemporary Aristotelian Metaphysics", Oderberg's "Whatever is Changing...", and Oderberg's "Real Essentialism" are not explicitly Christian or related to the philosophy of religion (except the second, that is explicitly about the First Way of St. Thomas Aquinas) but implicitly related via the essentialists (particularly the Aristotelians) in the Christian tradition.

edit: Question for you: Which works of Plantinga? Also, by Zacharias, you mean Ravi Zacharias? I've never read much on him but I've heard he's okay. What is your take on him?

u/[deleted] · 2 pointsr/DebateReligion

Happy to olbige! First, I am not sure if there is just one reason for my faith. I would say, rather, that there are multiple reasons. The most fundamental reason I would say (at least, it is the I always go back to) is the religious experiences I have had. These experiences can be feeling of the love of God during times when life gets rough, or they can be the feeling one gets when looking into the night sky and feeling the majesty of God. Moreover, I do think such experiences can support rational belief in God. For more on this, I highly recommend William P. Alston's "Perceiving God.". Alston is a terrific philosopher and a great writer.

Also, I think that there are some arguments for the existence of God that offer inductive (evidential) support for God's existence. A terrific book on evidential reasoning for God's existence is Richard Swinburne's "The Existence of God.". Hope this is what you are looking for!